【sex anime video】
Relentlessness: A Syllabus
Syllabi

Photograph by Sophie Haigney.
In our new Winter issue, Belinda McKeon interviewed Colm Tóibín, the author of ten novels, two books of short stories, and several collections of essays and journalism. “In the autumn of 2000,” he told her, “I taught a course at the New School called Relentlessness, and I chose to teach translations of some ancient Greek texts, and Joan Didion, James Baldwin, Ingmar Bergman, Sylvia Plath. The class was very useful because it gave me a bedrock of theory about what this sort of work was doing. … Once you have that certain authority, you can actually write a plainer prose.” We askedTóibín for his syllabus from that class, along with a short introduction, as the first in a new series we are launching called Syllabi.
I am interested in texts that are pure voice or deal with difficult experience using a tone that does not offer relief or stop for comfort. Sometimes, the power in the text comes from powerlessness, whether personal or political. Sometimes, death is close or danger beckons or violence is threatened or enacted. Sometimes, there is a sense of real personal risk in the text’s revelations. Sometimes, there is little left to lose. All the time, the tone is incantatory or staccato or filled with melancholy recognitions.
Euripides, Medea
Sophocles, Electra
Sophocles, Antigone
Sylvia Plath, Ariel
Louise Glück, The Wild Iris
Anne Carson, Autobiography of Red
Juan Goytisolo, Forbidden Territory
Joan Didion, A Book of Common Prayer
Oscar Wilde, De Profundis
Nadine Gordimer, The Late Bourgeois World
Ingmar Bergman, Autumn Sonata
John McGahern, The Barracks
Béla Tarr and Ágnes Hranitzky, The Turin Horse
Doris Lessing, The Grass Is Singing
J. M. Coetzee, Age of Iron
Béla Bartók, Bluebeard’s Castle
Constance Debré, Love Me Tender
Colm Tóibín’s most recent book is The Magician.
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
Best headphones deal: Save $150 on Beats Studio Pro
2025-06-27 00:03Staff Picks: Robot Maids, Airships, Geocities by The Paris Review
2025-06-26 23:59From the Archive: Donald Justice’s “Last Days of Prospero”
2025-06-26 23:59Samuel Beckett on One of His Favorite Paintings
2025-06-26 23:06Popular Posts
Instagram tests Storylines, a collaborative twist on Stories
2025-06-27 00:02“Coke,” a Poem by Scott Cohen
2025-06-26 23:49Swimming with Oliver Sacks
2025-06-26 23:35Malcolm Lowry Gushes in a Fan Note to Conrad Aiken
2025-06-26 21:44Keeping Hope Alive
2025-06-26 21:29Featured Posts
Shop the Google Pixel Pro 9 for $200 off at Amazon
2025-06-26 23:44In “Storylines,” Writers and Artists Cross
2025-06-26 23:37Flower Voyeur: A Comic by Lauren R. Weinstein
2025-06-26 22:46Five Photographs by Ellen Auerbach
2025-06-26 22:38Popular Articles
Staff Picks: Robot Maids, Airships, Geocities by The Paris Review
2025-06-26 23:46The Font of Poetry, the Poetry of Font
2025-06-26 22:27Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (6816)
Miracle Information Network
Sunday's Fat Bear Week match pits two fat favorites against each other
2025-06-26 23:58Unique Information Network
Cynthia Macdonald, 1928–2015 by Dan Piepenbring
2025-06-26 23:33Reality Information Network
Alphabet Finds Google at Its Most Machiavellian
2025-06-26 22:53Warm Information Network
Announcing Our Fall 2015 Issue
2025-06-26 22:35Progress Information Network
Amazon Big Spring Sale 2025: Best Apple deals on iPads, MacBooks, and more still live
2025-06-26 21:52